Showing posts with label college students. Show all posts
Showing posts with label college students. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 1, 2023

In This Moment: Mapping the Massacre; The Real Israel; Giving Back a Diploma

 

In This Moment


Combat deaths announced today...

The Real Israel


Click on the boxes below (or here) and watch this short video. This is the real Israel - the Israel we know is there, that anyone who has been there has experienced, and that can be there again. And this is what Judaism, Islam and Christianity are truly all about.

October 7th Geo-visualization Project

strives to provide a comprehensive representation of the atrocities committed by Hamas on that day. This interactive map serves as a reflection and an educational tool, promoting awareness of the gravity of the horrors. It also features profiles of victims. Click on the map to activate.

The Home Front:

Antisemitism on Campus


Nobody can win a war like this':

Jewish students reflect on Israeli-Hamas war

In this fuzzier CNN video discussing incidents on campuses in Georgia, Linda Rezak's granddaughter Maya, who is vice president of Hillel at Emory, is the 1st one interviewed.

The discovery of swastikas at a Stamford school gave the current worldwide spate of antisemitic attacks a local edge. Just today another one has been discovered at Rippowam Middle School. The public schools have proactively reached out to rabbis to involve us in conversations about how to make our schools safer spaces for Jewish children. I will be in attendance.


Meanwhile, TBE's Carol Battin shared with me a letter written by her son Philip Mayer to the president of UPenn. Click on it for a full-size pdf. And beneath that, see the moral fight at the University of California play out to define Hamas's actions as "terrorist."

Tweet du Jour

Thursday's Israel Headlines

The Jerusalem Post

Ha'aretz (English)

Yediot Achronot

Recommended Reading


  • Why Israel is fast losing the public relations war (Jonathan Sarna, TOI) - Far from being a “small” terrorist group dwelling among many “innocent” civilians, Hamas actually depends upon tens of thousands of ordinary Gazans who assist it. Just as the Nazi mass murderers depended upon large numbers of local enablers, so too its counterparts in Hamas. In both cases, the enablers subsequently feigned innocence and ignorance. Such claims, however, strain credulity.



  • DAY 26 OF THE GAZA WAR: IDF Suffers Casualties as Rocket Attacks Decrease, Economic Concerns Mount (Marc Schulman) The US media has learned nothing this past week. Last night, all the major media outlets pushed a notification asserting Israel killed scores of civilians in the Gazan Jabaya refugee camp. Over the course of the night, these veteran, widely respected news organizations each began to fact-check and correct the story, but the damage had already been done. Most people will never read the story, they just take in the notifications that flood their screens. The actual facts are captured in these tweets from within Gaza.
Temple Beth El
350 Roxbury Road
Stamford, Connecticut 06902
203-322-6901 | www.tbe.org
  
A Conservative, Inclusive, Spiritual Community

Friday, April 27, 2018

Shabbat-O-Gram for April 27

Shabbat Shalom

As we look forward to Mediterranean Shabbat on Friday night and Shabbat-in-the-Round on Shabbat morning, we also turn our attention to some concerns on college campuses. This Shabbat-O-Gram features first-hand accounts from TBE students reporting from two significant flash points. Both students have given me permission to share their thoughts.  I've heard from other collegians recently as well, one in the Boston area, one at UConn, and another who just visited Auschwitz while studying abroad.  I've also heard from a very concerned Barnard alum.  We can be really proud of what our students are doing in standing up for who they are.

The atmosphere has become more challenging than ever, making it clearer than ever before that our kids are on the front lines in a worldwide struggle to define and often malign Israel, while dredging up old anti-Semitic canards.  While these front lines can't be compared to what Israeli soldiers deal with (and we look forward to welcoming some Tzahal Shalom visitors tonight), there is no denying that the pressures are great.  For that reason we have a right to expect that Israel will see the need to arm us for battle, not with talking points and propaganda, but by acting in a manner that we and our children can find defensible - one  in line with Jewish values.

After sharing from the students who wrote to me this week, I'll share an email from a recent grad who wrote from abroad a couple of weeks ago.  We - and Israel - need to hear his concern too. 

I appreciate the engagement of our students, many of whom have been to Israel on Birthright and feel much more invested than the prior generation.  It also speaks to how well our community (synagogues, JCC, schools, federation, youth groups) has made Israel come alive for them.  Their continued engagement needs to be a high priority for us.  

Which reminds me - anyone who will be in Israel on Birthright this June and July, let me know!  There could be a free Shabbat meal with our group in it for you!

-------

First an exchange with Stephanie Hausman, who goes to Syracuse:

Hi Rabbi Hammerman.

Right now the environment at Syracuse is pretty intense. Videos were released from an engineering fraternity, Theta Tau, that included ignorant and hateful sentiments towards basically every single minority group. This has resulted in a huge backlash with protests on campus and a "Recognize Us" student movement calling for action from administrators. 

Even though this has all stemmed from such a horrible event, it's interesting to see diverse parts of campus come together.

I'm an assembly member for our Student Association so I've been taking an active role in everything going on. The most disheartening part of all of this is that there isn't much involvement from the Jewish students on campus. Our Hillel has been very proactive, such as speaking with students and holding discussions, but it's a two-way street and Jewish students aren't doing much to be a part of the conversation. I'm also in AEPHI, a predominantly Jewish sorority, and only about 15 of us attended the main forum the day that everything happened, which was really disappointing.  

I have never felt discriminated against as a Jew at Syracuse University, and I honestly don't know many others that have either. The problem on our campus isn't anti-Semitism--I think it's apathy. Black and Latino students have been extremely loud and involved to make change, yet even though the majority of the video was hateful towards Jews, there are hardly any Jewish voices. I haven't really figured out why this is the case, but in the meantime, I'm trying to be as much of a Jewish presence in this movement as possible. 

I'm curious to hear your thoughts on why Jewish students haven't been involved or any advice you have on what I can do to get them involved. I hope you're doing well and I'll keep you updated!

-Steph
 
My reply:
 
Wow - thanks for the update, Stephanie. So sorry to hear about this. Apathy is common and not relegated to college campuses. I see enough of it here too!  I think many Jewish students also feel uncomfortable being seen as victims. They also have trouble believing that anti-Semitism is so prevalent, since they haven't personally experienced it. They (and we) also didn't have to grow up with it, whereas other minorities face bias all the time and are more prepared to confront it. 
 
I think it's really important to cultivate alliances among these other groups, to show that Jews care about them - and by extension, that support for Israel does not preclude support for their concerns, but in fact the two go hand in hand. Jews on campus will take notice. Now is a real chance to strengthen those alliances.
 
There are so many Jews at your school that it's easy to sink into the background and ignore the problem. So it's important to meet people in small groups, or one on one, which it sounds like Hillel does.
 
In the end, it's best to think less about who isn't getting involved than who is - and keep growing your movement, one person at a time.
 
I am soooo not surprised that you are leader in this (and of course I'm less surprised, since I spoke to your mom last week). 
 
Thanks and have courage! 
 
Rabbi H
 

Thank you so much! I've really thought about everything you said and am going to focus more on the people that I know who do care and are trying to help, and to work with them as best as I can. Last night I also went to another forum about bias on campus and there were tons of administrators there taking notes and listening, which gave me hope that maybe something will change on campus. 

Feel free to share my thoughts with my name, too!

- Steph


------------------

Here's an exchange I had with Maura Welt, who studies at THE George Washington University.

Hi Rabbi,
 
My dad forwarded me your latest newsletter which requested to hear about anti-Semitic incidents on college campuses.  As you may have heard, BDS passed at GWU late last night.  The resolution has been brought forward to the Student Association two years in a row now, only losing by a single vote last year.  
 
Prior to this, our latest Student Association elections experienced a controversy surrounding the issue of anti-Semitic.  The Grad Senator at Large, Brady Forrest, who was running for Vice President was called out for concerning anti-Semitic and anti-Zionist comments that he had made in the past.  Here is a link to an article that explains these comments and the controversy around them.  
 
The senate had discussed removing Brady from his post as senator, yet that evidently did not come to fruition.  He however was not allowed to attend the BDS vote for obvious reasons.  Last night was especially troubling because the senate voted in favor of Brady voting on the BDS resolution by proxy, despite his blatantly offensive and anti-Semitic comments.  Senators failed to reach a 2/3 majority to censure Forrest.  Despite many senators being members of groups such as SJP, JVP, and Divest This Time, this was still shocking.  Jewish students, such as myself were left hurt and appalled, and we left the proceedings, as it became clear that the Student Association cared more about passing a resolution than it did about protecting its Jewish students from hateful rhetoric.  
 
Earlier this year, senator Joe Vogel, was removed from his post after "missing meetings."  He was the first senator to be impeached in three years.  Vogel founder of "GW Together" on campus, objected that his removal was due to his pro-Israel beliefs. Yet, Brady, one of the senators who pushed for Vogel's removal and a rabid anti-Semite, was allowed to keep his post.  This speaks volumes.  StandWithUs shared a powerful video from last night of Joe condeming the SA for failing to stand up to anti-semitism.  
 
Today, the president of the University came out to express that the views of the senate do not necessarily reflect the views of the university at large. This was comforting to many students who felt unsafe and unwelcomed on campus after the events that took place last night.  Luckily, GW has a very close-knit Jewish community who has been very supportive of one another through this difficult time.  This community includes groups like GW for Israel, J-Street, GW Together, GW Hillel, and GW Chabad.  
 
I also read an interesting student-written opinion piece in the Forward yesterday.  I don't whole heartedly agree with everything the article says, but in terms of early Jewish education it raises some valid points.  
 
I hope that you and Mara are doing well, and maybe that I will get to see you when I am home for the summer! I am currently taking an Arab-Israeli conflict class which I am thoroughly enjoying, as constructive dialogue on the issue happens too infrequently on college campuses.  
 
Best,
 
Maura 


Hi Maura

I just read your email and thought the article I sent out to the congregation today might be helpful, as well as the Hoffman Lecture video with Beinart and Gordis, if you have time to watch it. I really feel for what you are going through. It sounds really bad - but also constructive, as Jewish students are becoming more engaged - and impressively unified.  I've also heard some disturbing things from other campuses too. 
 
I think that Forward article you linked to is helpful.  In Stamford we've tried to prepare kids to engage with Israel in a comprehensive and nuanced way, but it's hard to prepare people for what they are going to face on campus - and this year has been particularly challenging. Combine the old BDS stuff on the left with the new infusion of White Supremacist anti-Semitism, which has been given lots of winking approval from the White House, and then throw in a combustible situation in Gaza and Syria, plus the disintegration of social media into a chaotic, uncivil mess, and voila.  
 
Anyway, just know that Mara and I are here for you.  You are doing a great job and we are very proud! 
 
Keep the faith!

Rabbi H
 ----------
And here is the third correspondence:
Dear Rabbi Hammerman,

I hope everything is going well with you!

I know we don't often see eye to eye on Israel/Palestine issues, but I thought the recent news out of Gaza was an extremely troubling omission in this week's Shabbat-O-Gram. I want to be clear that I don't think it is by definition a responsibility of diaspora Jewish clergy to comment on Israel, but by consistently pushing a connection to the modern state in our congregation I believe you have a responsibility to address when it acts in conflict with Jewish values (a daily occurrence, but this is particularly egregious).

I applaud your continued effort to teach Judaism's relationship to pressing issues of the day. Your loud, active push against the proliferation of gun violence was particularly moving. However, your silence in the face of gun violence of a different nature makes me uneasy.

We read the Passover story every year to remind ourselves of the need for liberation in all forms. The state of Israel slaughtered peaceful protesters in Gaza simply for demanding basic human rights and freedoms, similar to the liberation demanded by our ancestors in Egypt. Their metaphorical plea of "next year in Jerusalem" were way more real than at our seder tables, yet they were fired upon for this by a state that our community supports for somehow relating to and representing our values. I am disappointed and disturbed that you did not feel this injustice-particularly at this time in the Jewish calendar-was worth discussing.

Best,   _____
Hi ____

Your comments are totally fair.  Given the plethora of urgent issues right now, it's impossible to give each situation a fair shake.  Right now I am apoplectic about free speech and press freedom, as exemplified most recently by revelations about Sinclair.  As a fellow journalist, I think you can understand my first-amendment concerns.  But I haven't gone whole hog into that one yet.  This week is Earth Day and I intend to focus on environmental matters, and next week is Yom Haatzamaut and Israel 70, so I will undoubtedly find a way to address Gaza and other matters regarding Israel over the coming weeks.  BTW, we've been doing a year long course on Israel that has been really good - coordinated by the Hartman Institute.  And if you did not catch the Hoffman Lecture last November, with Peter Beinart and Daniel Gordis, it's definitely worth a watch. 
 
I'm greatly concerned about Gaza - IMHO, it is symptomatic less of Israel's longstanding policies than of Netanyahu's attempt to distract from his legal woes by demonizing the enemy (even more than Israelis already have), assisted by Defense Minister Liberman.  Hamas is not innocent here either. 
 
Anyway, thanks for reading and keeping up - and keep after me! You can be sure that, while I always try to be fair when it comes to Israel, and will never stop loving Israel, I will continue to hold it up to a high standard. 

Regards, 
 
Rabbi H

God's Clubhouse
As we celebrate my 30 years here, I've been rummaging through articles I've written over the years.  This piece from 2002 is not among those that I would consider my most influential, but it chronicles an important transition that occurred here, as well as an evolution my own thinking.  The moment we shifted the center of gravity from the pulpit to the pew, we instantly became more inclusive and participatory.  I stepped off the Bimah and begin to sit in the front row, breaking the proverbial "fourth wall" that separates spectator from performer.  Since then, we haven't looked back.  See the transcribed article below the photo:
 
As I sat in my ritual committee meeting last week, and all I could think about was a Berenstain Bears story that I used to read to my kids at bedtime. It was the one where Brother Bear decides to build a clubhouse up in a tree to get away from his tag-along younger sister. Sister takes a walk into the woods looking for Brother and is shocked to see the big sign out front of his hut, “NO GIRLS ALLOWED.” A big to-do ensues, with Mama and Papa Bear eventually helping Sister to build her own girls-only clubhouse, fully stocked with a smorgasbord of honeycomb and salmon. This attracts Brother, who is invited up for a snack and recognizes the errors of his ways.

The Berenstains would have appreciated the committee meeting, because Topic A was that elevated piece of real estate that seems to cause more controversy among Jews than any other property this side of the Green Line: the Bimah. Not that this is anything new. God’s Clubhouse has been a hot topic for thousands of years. Ever since the days of King Josiah, who destroyed lofty holy sites as often as Barry Bonds destroys fastballs, Jews have been obsessed with the architecture of worship, alternately building up and knocking down these high places, while consuming oodles of energy trying to figure out who belongs up there and who does not.

For my congregation, the issue was finding appropriate ways of involving non-Jewish parents of a Bar or Bat Mitzvah on the pulpit. For other synagogues the issue might be the presence on the Bimah of women, non-Jewish clergy, animals, mini-skirts, Republicans, ex-presidents, board members who’ve been indicted, husbands who haven’t given their divorced wives a proper “get,” or Bibi Netanyahu. Rabbis have been fired over whom they’ve invited onto the Bimah. Congregations have split over it. No doubt even Stan and Jan Berenstain have been burned by a Bimah snub at some point.

I tend to take an inclusive view when it comes to these things; but more and more I’ve come to realize that the question shouldn’t be who gets to go on the Bimah, but rather why we need to have a Bimah at all. I love the symbolism of seeking God in high places, but if God is everywhere, why not low ones as well? While Psalm 121 speaks of how we “turn our eyes toward the mountains, from where my help will come,” Psalm 130 suggests a more humble approach: “Out of the depths I cry to you, O Lord.” This latter verse has inspired the construction of some Bimahs below the level of the sanctuary floor, sort of like an orchestra pit.

For most of Jewish history, the reader’s pulpit was located primarily in the center of the sanctuary and not where the ark and Torah scrolls were found. That changed in the 19th century, when the Reform movement located both the Bimah and ark in the front of the sanctuary, modeling itself after European church architecture. This innovation was vigorously protested, leading to proclamation by 100 Orthodox rabbis prohibiting worship in a synagogue that does not have a Bimah in the center.

If these rabbis were concerned that the frontal Bimah would lead to a more theatrical, less participatory service, they were right. The liberal movements have been paying the price for that innovation ever since, and many congregations have lowered their nosebleed pulpits in recent years. But I wonder how many of the Reform originators of the modern pulpit had any idea that it would eventually become a vehicle for arbitrary discrimination. If the stifling lack of participation weren’t enough reason to cut it down, the fact that it has become a weapon for pettiness and unnecessary exclusion should be.

Maimonides understood this nine centuries ago. In the design favored in his Mishnah Torah, the entire congregation sits in rows facing a fixed platform up front where the ark and Torah scroll are placed. Most have their backs to the Bimah, which is located in the center. But the Bimah is where almost all of the service takes place, including the sermon and reading of the Torah. (This configuration differs from many contemporary synagogues and Havurot, where congregants sit in a semi-circle facing the Bimah in the center, with all eyes on the leader.) In Maimonides’ scheme, the service leader is meant to be heard, not seen; humility is emphasized, so that nothing might distract us from contemplating the divine. In the 17th-century Altneuschul in Prague, this concept is brought to an extreme: the Bimah is enclosed in a wrought iron cage (a great idea for tag-team wrestling, but please do not try this on your local clergy).

Appropriately, the focus of Halachic sources is not on who stands where, but on who is qualified to represent the community in leading the service. While I do not agree with some of the traditional restrictions (excluding unbearded men, for instance, or a person who pronounces an aleph as an ayin, or one suspected of being a “freethinker;” oh yes, and women) at least it gets us beyond who has the right to stand in the front of the room and eliminates the possibility of Bimah-envy.

There is much to be said for abolishing the frontal Bimah. At my synagogue, we hold many Bimah-free services outside the main sanctuary, and even in the “big room,” I now spend most of the service off the pulpit. The primary result is that we’re less preoccupied with who’s been invited to God’s Clubhouse. Board members now get to sit with their families or be warm and welcoming in the back. Seeking God has become less a matter of who belongs up there and more of what’s going on down here. Liberated from the distractions, I’ve actually caught myself praying from time to time. Perhaps even God has relished this release from wrought iron captivity. The mountain has become a molehill and we’ve discovered that at its peak there’s room enough for us all.
Shabbat Shalom,
Rabbi Joshua Hammerman

Friday, April 1, 2016

Shabbat-O-Gram for April 1

Shabbat Shalom

This evening we are delighted to welcome  JCC Tzahal Shalom soldiers, who will be speaking during the service.  We are grateful to our TBE host families, the Roths, Shapiros and Ebens.  And speaking of the Roths, mazal tov to Dana and Stuart Roth, who will be honored with a special leadership award at Carmel Academy's "Erev Tov" celebration.

Trip(s) Update

The Jewish Heritage trip to Central Europe will now be rescheduled for early in the summer of 2017.  While we likely could have gone this summer, a significant number of people preferred next year, for a variety of reasons.  So we're working on a revised itinerary and pricing, which I hope to post soon.  The trip would be open to all ages, and I'd like especially to encourage families with teenagers to consider coming with us.  As of now, there is no community March of the Living group, as there was for a number of years, and this priceless experience (even if at a different time of year) is something that no Jewish teen should miss.  I am already looking into scholarship options to encourage families with teens to join us - including our Men's Club's new Yellow Candle program.

I am also looking into a possible congregational trip to Cuba for next winter. Please let me know if you might be interested.

Peas Process: What's the Deal About Legumes on Passover?


 






With Purim behind us now is the time to download the  Rabbinical Assembly Passover Guide for all your Passover hows, whys, whats, do's and don'ts.  See also my Passover "Guide for the Perplexed."  And if you are confused about the question of legumes (kitniyot), eaten by Sephardic Jews but traditionally not in Ashkenazi homes, the Rabbinical Assembly issued rulings on this topic just three months ago.  We will be discussing the Kitniyot Question as our Torah Study session at Shabbat morning services this week.

Sharing Passover 




  



Reservations are coming in for next Tuesday's "Sharing Passover" program. All are welcome, but we especially are looking for interfaith couples, as well as parents of interfaith couples.  Along with Scott and Rae-ann Allen, we will be assisted by two representatives of the younger generation, Ariel (Schindler) and Antony Wilshaw.  Please extend an invitation to interfaith couples as well as parents and grandparents, to join us on April 5!

Anti-Semitism or Anti-Zionism?  The View from College Campuses

Imagine how excited I was to pick up my copy of the Jewish Forward last Shabbat afternoon, and when reading the intriguing article: 6 Jewish Students Reveal How Israel Debate Colors Campus Life; I noticed that the first of those students was none other than our own Mike Sosnick.  Mike's point is that, while there is significant antipathy toward Israel at Cornell, his campus, it doesn't come close to what he would consider anti-Semitism.  And in fact, at times he's been made to feel more uncomfortable by fellow Jews than by non Jews. 

This topic has been receiving much traction lately, with the decision by University of California regents which condemned anti-Semitism, but fell short of the broad censure of anti-Zionism desired by Israel advocacy groups.

I've always felt that it is important for all our students to be prepared to discuss Israel's triumphs and challenges confidently and honestly on campus; but even more, to feel comfortable in their own Jewish skin, so that their opinions - and indeed their lives - can be shaped by a strong foundation of Jewish values.  So I'm really proud of Mike for being able to stand up proudly as a Jew wherever he has gone (and he's traveled quite far), but also to ask questions freely, even when they are hard questions.  I hope all our students know that I stand beside them on their Jewish journeys.

So now I ask our TBE collegians to join Mike in weighing in on this topic. Do you feel comfortable as a Jew on your campus, either in expressing your Jewishness overtly or in supporting Israel?  Or do you feel uncomfortable - and if so, does that discomfort stem more from external forces, such as BDS,  from professors - or from other Jews, including supporters of Israel? 

Write to me at rabbi@tbe.org

About Last Night
 


Last evening at the Unitarian Universalist Society, the community heard from three local Muslim leaders.  We were able to ask questions, including the tough questions, that many have been asking about Islam during these trying times. Perhaps even more important than the content of the responses was the SRO turnout, including many from the Jewish community.  It shows that we care and that we want to be informed.  The speakers happen to be good friends of mine - I serve with two of them on the Interfaith Council board.  They helped us to understand a few important things: 


1) That the essence of Islam has been misrepresented by those who distort it for political ends, including fundamentalists, Isis and those fueling the flames of Islamophobia. 

2) That moderate Muslims have been speaking out against extremism, but they have been drowned out.  The speakers cited especially the work of Duke Professor Christopher Bail in analyzing the media-aided  impact of the anti-Muslim fringe, including his recent book "Terrified." From the book's introduction: "Bail traces how the anti-Muslim narrative of the political fringe has captivated large segments of the American media, government, and general public, validating the views of extremists who argue that the United States is at war with Islam and marginalizing mainstream Muslim-Americans who are uniquely positioned to discredit such claims." 

While there is significant anecdotal evidence that moderate Muslims do speak out  (see also here)
, Kareem Adeeb, one of the spokespeople, made it clear last night that the risks of speaking out are infinitely higher for moderate Muslim clergy than for others.  Adeeb himself was targeted and nearly killed three times by terrorist groups.  That makes it all the more important that leaders of other faith groups rise to defend the Muslim moderates and help them to re-frame their

faith.  It takes far more courage for Kareem to do what he does than for me to defend him.  To see the recent birth of a Reform Movement i
n Islam is a tribute not only to the courage of those initiating this step, but to the pluralistic culture of America and Canada that has allowed non-fundamentalist expressions of many faiths to thrive - including of course our own.

3) That many of the oft-cited problematic sections of the Quran have been deliberately misinterpreted by extremists and taken out of context by others.  It would have been helpful last night to have had a page of text in front of us and have the speakers address specific verses.  Still, I can relate to how an ancient sacred text can be misinterpreted over the centuries - our Bible certainly has, both by extremist Jews and by anti-Semites; and the Bible also has passages that are very problematic.  The speakers also went so far as to defend the treatment of women in traditional Muslim society.  That too needs to be fleshed out more in future dialogues.  But here again there are parallels to Judaism.  The ultra-Orthodox interpretation of Jewish law regarding women and other matters has become increasingly stringent over the past few centuries, just as Muslim society has polarized.

4) But the main point I got out of last night, and one that came through loud and clear even with a challenged sound system, as one of empathy.  For all the pain everyone is feeling with the rise of ISIS and increases in terror, the pain being felt by Muslims is at least as acute.  For not only are Muslims by far the most frequent victims of this terror (including last week's attack on children in Pakistan), but on top of it, they are facing unprecedented fury and discrimination at home, including, now, here in America.

We cannot allow Islamophobia to prevail.   As Jews, we have seen firsthand the results of unrestrained hate.  We've seen it directed against us and, regrettably, at times by us.

Let's hope that in this country cooler heads can prevail and we can work closely with the Muslim community to deepen the ties that bind us.  As one of the speakers said last night, the Muslim community is in great need, not of sanctions and suspicion, but of a hug.  And perhaps that is what last night's overflow turnout was all about.

Shabbat Shalom

Rabbi Joshua Hammerman